Understanding how systems and markets follow paths of least resistance, anticipating flow around obstacles rather than head-on collision.
One of Laozi's most celebrated metaphors is water—always finding the path of least resistance, flowing around rather than crashing into obstacles, persistent through gentleness. Applied to markets and technological futures, the watercourse way reveals how innovation and adoption follow natural contours rather than engineer's blueprints. Regulators attempt barriers; adoption flows around them. Incumbent defenders resist; markets bypass them. Understanding this pattern helps anticipators identify which futures face resistance (and thus likely failure) versus which align with the direction of least resistance. This isn't about giving up on difficult change but recognizing that sustainable transformation works with rather than against natural incentive structures and human behavior. By mapping the contours of system resistance—regulatory, economic, psychological—you can anticipate where change will flourish versus stall. The watercourse way teaches that force is temporary; alignment with natural flows creates lasting futures.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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